US4299928A - Impact modified polycarbonates - Google Patents
Impact modified polycarbonates Download PDFInfo
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- US4299928A US4299928A US06/130,288 US13028880A US4299928A US 4299928 A US4299928 A US 4299928A US 13028880 A US13028880 A US 13028880A US 4299928 A US4299928 A US 4299928A
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C08—ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
- C08L—COMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
- C08L69/00—Compositions of polycarbonates; Compositions of derivatives of polycarbonates
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- This invention relates to polycarbonates and more particularly to polycarbonates having improved impact performance.
- thermoplastic polymers derived from reactions involving organic dihydroxy compounds and carbonic acid derivatives have found extensive commercial applications because of their excellent mechanical and physical properties. These thermoplastic polymers are particularly suited for molding articles for which impact strength, rigidity, toughness, thermal and dimensional stability as well as excellent electrical properties are required.
- critical thickness a material parameter defined as that thickness at which a discontinuity occurs in the graphical representation of impact strength vs. specimen thickness.
- critical thickness a material parameter defined as that thickness at which a discontinuity occurs in the graphical representation of impact strength vs. specimen thickness.
- polycarbonate based on bisphenol A having a melt flow rate of 3 to 6 grams/10 minutes at 300° C. (ASTM D 1238) exhibits a discontinuity at about 5.71 mm (225 mils). Articles of this material thinner than 225 mils will show ductile failure upon impact while thicker ones will fail in a brittle fashion.
- the present invention which teaches a blend of about 80 to 99 percent by weight of polycarbonate resin and about 1 to 20 percent by weight of acrylic rubber interpolymer composite comprising about 25 to 95 percent by weight of an elastomeric phase and about 75 to 5 percent by weight of a rigid thermoplastic phase.
- acrylic rubber interpolymer is also improved by the incorporation of acrylic rubber interpolymer.
- polycarbonate resin means the neat resin without additives; "polycarbonate” means the polycarbonate resin with additives incorporated therein.
- the polycarbonate resins of the invention may be prepared by conventional methods of preparation for polycarbonate resins and may have a weight average molecular weight of 10,000 to 200,000 and preferably a melt flow rate of 1 to 24 grams/10 minutes at 300° C. (ASTM D-1238).
- any suitable processes, reactants, catalysts, solvent conditions and the like for the production of polycarbonate resins of this invention which are customarily employed in polycarbonate resin syntheses may be used, such as disclosed in German Pat. Nos. 1,046,311 and 962,274 and U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,248,414; 3,153,008; 3,215,668; 3,187,065; 3,028,365; 2,999,846; 2,964,974; 2,970,137; 1,991,273 and 2,999,835, all incorporated herein by reference.
- the preferred process is the interfacial polycondensation process.
- polycarbonate resins are obtained by reacting the aromatic dihydroxy compounds with an alkali metal hydroxide or alkaline earth metal oxide or hydroxide to form the salt of the hydroxy compounds.
- the salt mixture is present in an aqueous solution or suspension and is reacted with phosgene, carbonyl bromide or bischloroformic esters of the aromatic dihydroxy compounds.
- An organic solvent is provided in the reaction admixture which is a solvent for the polymer but not for the aromatic dihydroxy salts.
- chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons or chlorinated aromatic hydrocarbons are used as the organic solvent which dissolves the condensation product.
- monofunctional reactants such as monophenols, for example the propyl-, isopropyl- and butyl-phenols, especially p-tert.-butyl-phenol and phenol itself.
- catalysts such as tertiary amines, quaternary ammonium, phosphonium or arsonium salts and the like may be used.
- the reaction temperature should be about -20° to +150° C., preferably 0° C. to about 100° C.
- the dissolved reaction components are polycondensed in an inert solvent in the presence of an equivalent amount of a tertiary amine base required for absorption of the generated HCl, such as e.g. N,N-dimethyl-aniline, N,N-dimethyl-cyclohexylamine or preferably pyridine and the like.
- a diaryl carbonate can be transesterified with the aromatic dihydroxy compounds to form the polycarbonate resin.
- the aromatic polycarbonates can be branched by incorporating small amounts, i.e. between 0.05 and 2.0 mol percent (relative to the amount of diphenols) of compounds which are trifunctional or more than trifunctional, in particular those with three or more phenolic hydroxyl groups.
- Polycarbonates of this type are described, for example, in DOS (German published specifications) Nos. 1,570,533; 1,595,762; 2,116,974; 2,113,347 and 2,500,092, in British Patent Specification 1,079,821 and in U.S. Pat. No. 3,511,514.
- Examples of some of the compounds which have three or more phenolic hydroxyl groups and which can be used are phloroglucinol, 4,4-dimethyl-2,4,6-tri-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-hept-2-ane, 4,6-dimethyl-2,4,6-tri-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-heptane, 1,3,5-tri-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-benzene, 1,1,1-tri-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-ethane, tri-(4-hydroxyphenyl)phenylmethane, 2,2-bis-[4,4-bis-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-cyclohexyl]propane, 2,4-bis(4-hydroxy-phenylisopropyl)-phenyl-2,6-bis-(2-hydroxy-5'-methyl-benzyl)-4-methylphenol, 2-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-2-(2,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-propane and 1,4-bis-(4,4"
- trifunctional compounds are 2,4-dihydroxybenzoic acid, trimesic acid, cyanuric chloride, 3,3-bis-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-2-oxo-2,3-dihydroindole and 3,3-bis-(3-methyl-4-hydroxyphenyl)-2-oxo-2,3-dihydroindole.
- Acrylic rubber interpolymer composites are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,808,180 and 4,096,202, both incorporated by reference herein. Briefly, the technology described therein is that of the preparation of a specific class of multiphase compounds. These are compositions comprising about 25 to 95 percent by weight of a first elastomeric phase and about 75 to 5 percent by weight of a second, rigid, thermoplastic phase. The first phase is polymerized from about 75 to 99.8 percent by weight C 1 to C 6 acrylate resulting in an acrylic rubber core having a glass transition temperature below about 10° C. which is cross-linked with 0.1 to 5 percent by weight of a cross-linking monomer and to which is added 0.1 to 5 percent by weight of a graft-linking monomer.
- the preferred alkyl acrylate is butyl acrylate.
- the cross-linking monomer is a polyethylenically unsaturated monomer having a plurality of addition polymerizable reactive groups all of which polymerize at substantially the same rate of reaction. Suitable cross-linking monomers include polyacrylic and polymethacrylic esters of polyols such as butylene diacrylate and dimethacrylate, trimethylol propane trimethacrylate and the like; di- and trivinyl benzene, vinyl acrylate and methacrylate, and the like.
- the preferred cross-linking monomer is butylene diacrylate.
- the graft-linking monomer is a polyethylenically unsaturated monomer having a plurality of addition polymerizable reactive groups, at least one of which polymerizing at a substantially different rate of polymerization from at least one other of said reactive groups.
- the function of the graft-linking monomer is to provide a residual level of unsaturation in the elastomeric phase, particularly in the latter stages of polymerization and consequently at or near the surface of the elastomer particles.
- the preferred graft-linking monomer is alkyl with acrylate and dialkyl maleate.
- the final stage monomer system can be comprised of C 1 to C 16 methacrylate, styrene, acrylonitrile, alkyl acrylates, alkyl methacrylate, dialkyl methacrylate, and the like, as long as the over Tg is at least 20° C.
- the final stage monomer system is at least 50 weight percent C 1 to C 4 alkyl methacrylate.
- the final stage polymer be free of units which tend to degrade poly(alkylene terephthalate); for example, acid, hydroxyl amino, and amide groups.
- a certain such acrylic rubber interpolymer composite characterized in that acrylic rubber core is comprised of n-butyl acrylate and in that its cross-linking agent is 1,3-butylene diarylate and in which the graft-linking agent is diallyl maleate and the second phase monomeric system of which is methyl methacrylate was discovered to have an unexpected and profound effect on the impact performance of polycarbonate resins.
- compositions of polycarbonates and the acrylic rubber interpolymer compound have been made to incorporate fire retardants, mold release agents (polycaprolactone having a reduced vicosity of 0.7, triglycerides, pentaerythritol tetrastearate and esters of trihydric alcohols and saturated aliphatic carboxylic acid) and UV stabilizers (benzotriazole).
- fire retardants polycaprolactone having a reduced vicosity of 0.7
- triglycerides polycaprolactone having a reduced vicosity of 0.7
- triglycerides pentaerythritol tetrastearate and esters of trihydric alcohols and saturated aliphatic carboxylic acid
- UV stabilizers benzotriazole
- Bisphenol-A based polycarbonate resin in pellet form, having a melt flow rate of 3.5.sup.(2) and a number average molecular weight of 36,000 was blended with acrylic rubber interpolymer composite and molded into test specimens.
- Blends of pelletized bisphenol-A based polycarbonate resin of 29,000 in weight average molecular weight and having a melt flow rate of 8 g/10 minutes ASTM D1238 and KM-330 were prepared, molded and tested as in the previously described Examples. The results of testings of these polycarbonates are reported in Table II:
- a blend of pelletized bisphenol-A based polycarbonate resin having a melt flow rate of 3.5 (at 300° C. per ASTM D-1238) and 3 phr of acrylic rubber interpolymer composite was injection molded. Processing temperatures of 650° F. in the course of injection molding does not adversely effect the appearance or the properties of these products.
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Abstract
Polycarbonates having improved impact performance are provided, comprising a blend of polycarbonate resin and an acrylic rubber interpolymer composite.
Description
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to polycarbonates and more particularly to polycarbonates having improved impact performance.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Polycarbonates derived from reactions involving organic dihydroxy compounds and carbonic acid derivatives have found extensive commercial applications because of their excellent mechanical and physical properties. These thermoplastic polymers are particularly suited for molding articles for which impact strength, rigidity, toughness, thermal and dimensional stability as well as excellent electrical properties are required.
It is known that polycarbonates exhibit high notched Izod (ASTM test D-256) impact values. These values, about 16 ft-lbs/in., associated with failure in a ductile mode, are characteristic of test specimens thinner than about one-eighth inch. Thicker specimens, i.e. one-fourth inch, fail in a brittle fashion at about 2.5 ft-lbs/in.
Impact strength dependence on thickness gives rise to "critical thickness", a material parameter defined as that thickness at which a discontinuity occurs in the graphical representation of impact strength vs. specimen thickness. For example, polycarbonate based on bisphenol A, having a melt flow rate of 3 to 6 grams/10 minutes at 300° C. (ASTM D 1238) exhibits a discontinuity at about 5.71 mm (225 mils). Articles of this material thinner than 225 mils will show ductile failure upon impact while thicker ones will fail in a brittle fashion.
This dependence of impact performance on thickness represents a drawback because it tends to limit the utility of polycarbonates by imposing restrictions on the design of molded articles.
One approach to solving the critical thickness problem has been by incorporation of polyolefin into the polycarbonate resin (see U.S. Pat. No. 3,437,631). Another approach, taught by U.S. Pat. No. 4,043,980, entails the introduction of sulfur containing aromatic diols into the polycarbonate chain. Neither of these approaches is completely satisfactory as they tend to compromise some other important characteristics of polycarbonate resins. Acrylic rubber interpolymer composites have been suggested as impact modifiers of certain thermoplastic materials. These multiphase compounds have been disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,808,180 as impact modifiers of vinyl halides and acrylic polymers and in U.S. Pat. No. 4,096,202 as modifiers of poly(alkylene terephthalates).
It is an object of the invention to provide a polycarbonate of improved impact performance. Another object is to provide a process for such improvement without significantly effecting the other characteristics of polycarbonates. These objects are achieved by the present invention which teaches a blend of about 80 to 99 percent by weight of polycarbonate resin and about 1 to 20 percent by weight of acrylic rubber interpolymer composite comprising about 25 to 95 percent by weight of an elastomeric phase and about 75 to 5 percent by weight of a rigid thermoplastic phase.
Also improved by the incorporation of acrylic rubber interpolymer is the impact performance of polycarbonate molding compositions that contain fire retardants and mold release agents.
When used herein, the term "polycarbonate resin" means the neat resin without additives; "polycarbonate" means the polycarbonate resin with additives incorporated therein. The polycarbonate resins of the invention may be prepared by conventional methods of preparation for polycarbonate resins and may have a weight average molecular weight of 10,000 to 200,000 and preferably a melt flow rate of 1 to 24 grams/10 minutes at 300° C. (ASTM D-1238).
Any suitable processes, reactants, catalysts, solvent conditions and the like for the production of polycarbonate resins of this invention which are customarily employed in polycarbonate resin syntheses may be used, such as disclosed in German Pat. Nos. 1,046,311 and 962,274 and U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,248,414; 3,153,008; 3,215,668; 3,187,065; 3,028,365; 2,999,846; 2,964,974; 2,970,137; 1,991,273 and 2,999,835, all incorporated herein by reference. The preferred process is the interfacial polycondensation process.
According to the interfacial polycondensation process, polycarbonate resins are obtained by reacting the aromatic dihydroxy compounds with an alkali metal hydroxide or alkaline earth metal oxide or hydroxide to form the salt of the hydroxy compounds. The salt mixture is present in an aqueous solution or suspension and is reacted with phosgene, carbonyl bromide or bischloroformic esters of the aromatic dihydroxy compounds. An organic solvent is provided in the reaction admixture which is a solvent for the polymer but not for the aromatic dihydroxy salts. Thus, chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons or chlorinated aromatic hydrocarbons are used as the organic solvent which dissolves the condensation product. In order to limit the molecular weight one may use monofunctional reactants such as monophenols, for example the propyl-, isopropyl- and butyl-phenols, especially p-tert.-butyl-phenol and phenol itself. In order to accelerate the reaction, catalysts such as tertiary amines, quaternary ammonium, phosphonium or arsonium salts and the like may be used. The reaction temperature should be about -20° to +150° C., preferably 0° C. to about 100° C.
According to the polycondensation process in a homogeneous phase, the dissolved reaction components are polycondensed in an inert solvent in the presence of an equivalent amount of a tertiary amine base required for absorption of the generated HCl, such as e.g. N,N-dimethyl-aniline, N,N-dimethyl-cyclohexylamine or preferably pyridine and the like. In still another process, a diaryl carbonate can be transesterified with the aromatic dihydroxy compounds to form the polycarbonate resin.
It is to be understood that it is possible to combine in the processes described above in a chemically meaningful way, both the aromatic dihydroxy compounds and the monohydroxy compounds in the form of the alkali metal salts and/or bis-haloformic acid esters, and the amount of phosgene or carbonyl bromide then still required in order to obtain high molecular weight products. Other methods of synthesis in forming the polycarbonates of the invention such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,912,688, incorporated herein by reference, may be used.
The aromatic polycarbonates can be branched by incorporating small amounts, i.e. between 0.05 and 2.0 mol percent (relative to the amount of diphenols) of compounds which are trifunctional or more than trifunctional, in particular those with three or more phenolic hydroxyl groups.
Polycarbonates of this type are described, for example, in DOS (German published specifications) Nos. 1,570,533; 1,595,762; 2,116,974; 2,113,347 and 2,500,092, in British Patent Specification 1,079,821 and in U.S. Pat. No. 3,511,514.
Examples of some of the compounds which have three or more phenolic hydroxyl groups and which can be used are phloroglucinol, 4,4-dimethyl-2,4,6-tri-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-hept-2-ane, 4,6-dimethyl-2,4,6-tri-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-heptane, 1,3,5-tri-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-benzene, 1,1,1-tri-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-ethane, tri-(4-hydroxyphenyl)phenylmethane, 2,2-bis-[4,4-bis-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-cyclohexyl]propane, 2,4-bis(4-hydroxy-phenylisopropyl)-phenyl-2,6-bis-(2-hydroxy-5'-methyl-benzyl)-4-methylphenol, 2-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-2-(2,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-propane and 1,4-bis-(4,4"-dihydroxy-triphenylmethyl)-benzene. Other suitable trifunctional compounds are 2,4-dihydroxybenzoic acid, trimesic acid, cyanuric chloride, 3,3-bis-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-2-oxo-2,3-dihydroindole and 3,3-bis-(3-methyl-4-hydroxyphenyl)-2-oxo-2,3-dihydroindole.
Acrylic rubber interpolymer composites are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,808,180 and 4,096,202, both incorporated by reference herein. Briefly, the technology described therein is that of the preparation of a specific class of multiphase compounds. These are compositions comprising about 25 to 95 percent by weight of a first elastomeric phase and about 75 to 5 percent by weight of a second, rigid, thermoplastic phase. The first phase is polymerized from about 75 to 99.8 percent by weight C1 to C6 acrylate resulting in an acrylic rubber core having a glass transition temperature below about 10° C. which is cross-linked with 0.1 to 5 percent by weight of a cross-linking monomer and to which is added 0.1 to 5 percent by weight of a graft-linking monomer.
The preferred alkyl acrylate is butyl acrylate. The cross-linking monomer is a polyethylenically unsaturated monomer having a plurality of addition polymerizable reactive groups all of which polymerize at substantially the same rate of reaction. Suitable cross-linking monomers include polyacrylic and polymethacrylic esters of polyols such as butylene diacrylate and dimethacrylate, trimethylol propane trimethacrylate and the like; di- and trivinyl benzene, vinyl acrylate and methacrylate, and the like. The preferred cross-linking monomer is butylene diacrylate. The graft-linking monomer is a polyethylenically unsaturated monomer having a plurality of addition polymerizable reactive groups, at least one of which polymerizing at a substantially different rate of polymerization from at least one other of said reactive groups. The function of the graft-linking monomer is to provide a residual level of unsaturation in the elastomeric phase, particularly in the latter stages of polymerization and consequently at or near the surface of the elastomer particles. The preferred graft-linking monomer is alkyl with acrylate and dialkyl maleate.
The final stage monomer system can be comprised of C1 to C16 methacrylate, styrene, acrylonitrile, alkyl acrylates, alkyl methacrylate, dialkyl methacrylate, and the like, as long as the over Tg is at least 20° C. Preferably, the final stage monomer system is at least 50 weight percent C1 to C4 alkyl methacrylate. It is further preferred that the final stage polymer be free of units which tend to degrade poly(alkylene terephthalate); for example, acid, hydroxyl amino, and amide groups.
A certain such acrylic rubber interpolymer composite characterized in that acrylic rubber core is comprised of n-butyl acrylate and in that its cross-linking agent is 1,3-butylene diarylate and in which the graft-linking agent is diallyl maleate and the second phase monomeric system of which is methyl methacrylate was discovered to have an unexpected and profound effect on the impact performance of polycarbonate resins. Considerable improvement of the impact performance, manifested by an increase of the critical thickness which is indicative of a favorable shift in the ductile to brittle transition region, is obtained according to the invention by blending polycarbonate resin with relatively small amounts of an acrylic rubber interpolymer compound.
Also of interest is the low temperature impact performance of these blends. Tested dart drop at -29° C., unmodified polycarbonates exhibit brittle failure whereas the blends incorporating the acrylic rubber interpolymer compound fail in a ductile fashion.
Compositions of polycarbonates and the acrylic rubber interpolymer compound have been made to incorporate fire retardants, mold release agents (polycaprolactone having a reduced vicosity of 0.7, triglycerides, pentaerythritol tetrastearate and esters of trihydric alcohols and saturated aliphatic carboxylic acid) and UV stabilizers (benzotriazole). The invention will be illustrated, but is not intended to be limited by the following Examples.
Bisphenol-A based polycarbonate resin, in pellet form, having a melt flow rate of 3.5.sup.(2) and a number average molecular weight of 36,000 was blended with acrylic rubber interpolymer composite and molded into test specimens. The compositional makeup of the interpolymer compound is described by the weight ratios of its constituent monomers as follows: n-butyl acrylate/1.3 butylene diacrylate/diallyl maleate/methyl methacrylate=79.2/0.4/0.4/20.0.sup.(4). Results of the testing are presented in Table I:
TABLE I ______________________________________ Impact strength, Polycarbonate Polycarbonates.sup.(1) ft.-lbs/in. Resin Control 5 phr 10 phr 15 phr ______________________________________ Notched Izod, 1/8" specimen 17.34 16.54 15.51 15.28 1/4" specimen 3.02 14.74 13.05 11.74 Critical thickness, mils 205 >263 >265 >261 Melt flow rate.sup.(2) gm/10 min. 3.3 3.2 2.5 1.9 Heat deflection temperature.sup.(3),°F. 278.1 281.0 271.2 271.0 Flexural modulus, psi × 10.sup.5 3.30 3.07 2.93 2.80 ______________________________________ .sup.(1) Polycarbonate resin blended with the designated amount of acryloid KM330 .sup.(2) Melt flow rate at 300° C. per ASTM D1238 .sup.(3) Heat deflection temperature at 264 psi, per ASTM D648 .sup.(4) Acryloid KM330, a product of the Rohm & Haas Company of Philadelphia, Pa.
Blends of pelletized bisphenol-A based polycarbonate resin of 29,000 in weight average molecular weight and having a melt flow rate of 8 g/10 minutes ASTM D1238 and KM-330 were prepared, molded and tested as in the previously described Examples. The results of testings of these polycarbonates are reported in Table II:
TABLE II __________________________________________________________________________ Polycarbonates.sup.(1) Control 1 phr 2 phr 3 phr 4 phr 5 phr 10 phr __________________________________________________________________________ Impact strength, ft-lbs/in. Notched Izod, 1/8" specimens 15.31 15.25 15.20 14.44 14.7 14.7 14.38 1/4" specimens 1.96 2.39 4.80 12.8 13.18 12.46 10.5 Critical thickness, mils 164 178 231 >250 >250 >250 >250 Dart drop test.sup.(2) ft. lbs. 54.3 54.9 50.1 49.5 48.6 47.3 42.0 Heat deflection temperature 264 psi, °F. 276.6 275.7 274.8 273.2 271.4 271.4 258.1 Flexural modulus, psi 10.sup.5 3.60 3.66 3.54 3.49 3.45 3.43 3.16 __________________________________________________________________________ .sup.(1) Polycarbonate resin blended with the designated amount of acryloid KM330 .sup.(2) Dart drop test, ASTM D3029 modified (constant weight, variable height)
A blend of pelletized bisphenol-A based polycarbonate resin having a melt flow rate of 3.5 (at 300° C. per ASTM D-1238) and 3 phr of acrylic rubber interpolymer composite was injection molded. Processing temperatures of 650° F. in the course of injection molding does not adversely effect the appearance or the properties of these products.
Blends similar to the one described in Example 2 were examined as to their thermal stability. Measurements of melt viscosity, at 300° C. after 5, 35 and 65 minutes at temperature indicate the same variation as observed with unblended polycarbonate resin.
Although the invention has been described with reference to specific materials, the invention is only to be limited so far as is set forth in the accompanying claims.
Claims (5)
1. A composition comprising a blend of about 80 to 99 percent by weight of an aromatic polycarbonate thermoplastic resin and about 1 to 20 percent by weight of a multiphase composite interpolymer comprising:
(a) about 25 to 95 percent by weight of a first elastomeric phase polymerized from a monomer system comprising about 75 to 99.8 percent by weight n-butyl acrylate, 0.1 to 5 percent by weight cross-linking member, 0.1 to 5 percent by weight graft-linking monomer, and
(b) about 75 to 5 percent of a second rigid thermoplastic phase polymerized in the presence of said elastomeric phase.
2. The composition of claim 1, wherein said cross-linking member is 1,3-butylene diacrylate, said graft-linking member is diallyl maleate and said second, rigid thermoplastic phase is methyl methacrylate.
3. A process for improving the impact performance of polycarbonate resins comprising blending therewith about 1 to 20 percent by weight of the multiphase composite interpolymer defined in claim 1.
4. The composition of claim 1 wherein said second rigid thermoplastic phase is characterized in that its glass transition temperature is at least 20° C.
5. The composition of claim 1 wherein said second rigid thermoplastic phase is at least 50 weight percent C1 to C4 alkyl methacrylate.
Priority Applications (7)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US06/130,288 US4299928A (en) | 1980-03-14 | 1980-03-14 | Impact modified polycarbonates |
CA000369501A CA1145882A (en) | 1980-03-14 | 1981-01-28 | Impact modified polycarbonates |
EP81101529A EP0036127B1 (en) | 1980-03-14 | 1981-03-04 | Polycarbonates with impact strength |
DE8181101529T DE3165485D1 (en) | 1980-03-14 | 1981-03-04 | Polycarbonates with impact strength |
JP3404881A JPS56143239A (en) | 1980-03-14 | 1981-03-11 | Shock-resistant improved polycarbonate and improvement therefor |
ES500340A ES8202039A1 (en) | 1980-03-14 | 1981-03-13 | Polycarbonates with impact strength. |
US06/304,397 US4378449A (en) | 1980-03-14 | 1981-09-21 | Impact modified polycarbonates |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
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US06/130,288 US4299928A (en) | 1980-03-14 | 1980-03-14 | Impact modified polycarbonates |
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US06/304,397 Continuation-In-Part US4378449A (en) | 1980-03-14 | 1981-09-21 | Impact modified polycarbonates |
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US4299928A true US4299928A (en) | 1981-11-10 |
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US06/130,288 Expired - Lifetime US4299928A (en) | 1980-03-14 | 1980-03-14 | Impact modified polycarbonates |
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EP (1) | EP0036127B1 (en) |
JP (1) | JPS56143239A (en) |
CA (1) | CA1145882A (en) |
DE (1) | DE3165485D1 (en) |
ES (1) | ES8202039A1 (en) |
Cited By (57)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4320212A (en) * | 1980-03-20 | 1982-03-16 | General Electric Co. | Ternary polycarbonate compositions containing polyacrylate and thermoplastic polyester |
WO1982003222A1 (en) * | 1981-03-23 | 1982-09-30 | Gen Electric | Ternary polycarbonate compositions |
US4378449A (en) * | 1980-03-14 | 1983-03-29 | Mobay Chemical Corporation | Impact modified polycarbonates |
US4390657A (en) * | 1981-10-19 | 1983-06-28 | General Electric Company | Composition of polycarbonate, an ABS resin and an acrylate-methacrylate interpolymer |
US4397982A (en) * | 1981-10-30 | 1983-08-09 | General Electric Company | Compositions |
US4427829A (en) | 1981-03-19 | 1984-01-24 | Teijin Chemicals, Ltd. | Polycarbonate resin composition |
DE3326562A1 (en) * | 1982-08-02 | 1984-02-02 | Mobay Chemical Corp., 15205 Pittsburgh, Pa. | POLYCARBONATE MIXTURES WITH IMPROVED IMPACT RESISTANCE |
US4430475A (en) | 1981-12-31 | 1984-02-07 | Mobay Chemical Corporation | Alkylated aromatic polycarbonate compositions of improved impact strength |
US4444949A (en) * | 1981-02-26 | 1984-04-24 | General Electric Company | Composition of a polycarbonate, a butadiene-styrene copolymer and a (meth)acrylate interpolymer |
US4461868A (en) * | 1982-03-20 | 1984-07-24 | Bayer Aktiengesellschaft | Mixture of a thermoplastic polymer of an alkyl methacrylate and a graft polymer of methyl methacrylate onto crosslinked alkyl acrylate rubber |
US4515921A (en) * | 1982-07-21 | 1985-05-07 | Mobay Chemical Corporation | Polycarbonate compositions having a high impact strength and melt flow rate |
GB2147587A (en) * | 1983-09-29 | 1985-05-15 | Mobay Chemical Corp | Stabilized polycarbonate compositions |
US4520164A (en) * | 1982-12-22 | 1985-05-28 | General Electric Company | Blends of aromatic polycarbonate resins, polyolefins and olefin copolymers, and acrylate interpolymer resins |
US4563503A (en) * | 1982-10-12 | 1986-01-07 | Mobay Chemical Corporation | Polycarbonate compositions having improved impact performance |
US4584338A (en) * | 1982-01-29 | 1986-04-22 | General Electric Company | High impact strength polycarbonate resin composition |
US4607079A (en) * | 1985-06-24 | 1986-08-19 | General Electric Company | Blend of polycarbonate, acrylate elastomeric copolymer and a phenoxy resin |
US4673708A (en) * | 1984-12-28 | 1987-06-16 | General Electric Company | Impact modified polyetherimide-polycarbonate blends |
US4677148A (en) * | 1984-03-23 | 1987-06-30 | Mobay Corporation | Thermoplastic compositions having improved mechanical properties |
US4677162A (en) * | 1983-04-15 | 1987-06-30 | Mobay Corporation | Polycarbonate blends having low gloss |
AU567187B2 (en) * | 1983-10-03 | 1987-11-12 | General Electric Company | Impact modified polyester-polycarbonate compositions |
US4786686A (en) * | 1987-05-06 | 1988-11-22 | The Dow Chemical Company | Fire retardant impact modified carbonate polymer composition |
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DE3248709A1 (en) * | 1982-01-29 | 1983-08-04 | General Electric Co., Schenectady, N.Y. | Thermoplastic moulding composition |
DE3245292A1 (en) * | 1982-12-08 | 1984-06-20 | Basf Ag, 6700 Ludwigshafen | THERMOPLASTIC MOLDS |
NL8403295A (en) * | 1984-10-31 | 1986-05-16 | Gen Electric | POLYMER MIXTURE WITH POLYCARBONATE AND POLYESTER. |
US4656225A (en) * | 1985-12-23 | 1987-04-07 | General Electric Company | Polycarbonate resin blends exhibiting improved resistance to stress crazing and cracking |
DE3803405A1 (en) * | 1988-02-05 | 1989-08-17 | Roehm Gmbh | IMPACT MODIFIER FOR POLYCARBONATE |
JPH08283520A (en) * | 1995-04-08 | 1996-10-29 | Nippon G Ii Plast Kk | Thermoplastic resin composition |
SE9601708D0 (en) | 1996-05-06 | 1996-05-06 | Pharmacia Ab | Pyridyl and pyrimidyl piperazines in the treatment of substance abuse disorders |
KR100658392B1 (en) | 2000-08-14 | 2006-12-15 | 미쯔비시 레이온 가부시끼가이샤 | Polycarbonate-based thermoplastic resin composition and manufacturing method |
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US4444949A (en) * | 1981-02-26 | 1984-04-24 | General Electric Company | Composition of a polycarbonate, a butadiene-styrene copolymer and a (meth)acrylate interpolymer |
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US4584338A (en) * | 1982-01-29 | 1986-04-22 | General Electric Company | High impact strength polycarbonate resin composition |
US4461868A (en) * | 1982-03-20 | 1984-07-24 | Bayer Aktiengesellschaft | Mixture of a thermoplastic polymer of an alkyl methacrylate and a graft polymer of methyl methacrylate onto crosslinked alkyl acrylate rubber |
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US4677162A (en) * | 1983-04-15 | 1987-06-30 | Mobay Corporation | Polycarbonate blends having low gloss |
US4847153A (en) * | 1983-07-13 | 1989-07-11 | Mobay Corporation | Metal plated molded compositions containing polycarbonate and a certain ABS resin |
US4581397A (en) * | 1983-09-29 | 1986-04-08 | Mobay Corporation | Stabilized polycarbonate composition |
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AU567187B2 (en) * | 1983-10-03 | 1987-11-12 | General Electric Company | Impact modified polyester-polycarbonate compositions |
US4677148A (en) * | 1984-03-23 | 1987-06-30 | Mobay Corporation | Thermoplastic compositions having improved mechanical properties |
US4673708A (en) * | 1984-12-28 | 1987-06-16 | General Electric Company | Impact modified polyetherimide-polycarbonate blends |
US4607079A (en) * | 1985-06-24 | 1986-08-19 | General Electric Company | Blend of polycarbonate, acrylate elastomeric copolymer and a phenoxy resin |
US4828921A (en) * | 1986-10-17 | 1989-05-09 | Mobay Corporation | Polycarbonate molding compositions |
US4786686A (en) * | 1987-05-06 | 1988-11-22 | The Dow Chemical Company | Fire retardant impact modified carbonate polymer composition |
US4837258A (en) * | 1987-05-06 | 1989-06-06 | The Dow Chemical Company | Fire retardant impact modified carbonate polymer composition |
US4883841A (en) * | 1988-10-05 | 1989-11-28 | The B.F. Goodrich Company | Polycarbonate compositions having multiple phase impact modifiers therein |
US5118759A (en) * | 1989-08-30 | 1992-06-02 | Bayer Aktiengesellschaft | Polycarbonate moulding compositions, their preparation and their use |
US5180781A (en) * | 1990-06-12 | 1993-01-19 | Bayer Aktiengesellschaft | Process for the production of alloys of rubbers and aromatic polyesters |
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
EP0036127B1 (en) | 1984-08-15 |
JPS56143239A (en) | 1981-11-07 |
CA1145882A (en) | 1983-05-03 |
ES500340A0 (en) | 1982-01-01 |
ES8202039A1 (en) | 1982-01-01 |
EP0036127A1 (en) | 1981-09-23 |
DE3165485D1 (en) | 1984-09-20 |
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